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It will be Miami’s first visit to South Bend since 1990, when the two were independent national powers. The teams have met twice since.

Miami has lost the last three meetings, falling in the 2010 Sun Bowl in El Paso and at Chicago’s Soldier Field in 2012, in addition to that 1990 meeting where No. 6 Notre Dame beat the No. 2 Hurricanes 29-20.

Miami hasn’t beat Notre Dame since the seventh-ranked Hurricanes handled the top-ranked Irish at the Orange Bowl in 1989. Their last win in South Bend: 1984, when No. 14 beat No. 16.

The rivalry, infamously branded “Catholics vs. Convicts,” was one of the best of the 1980s. The winner of the game went on to win the national championship in 1988 (Notre Dame) and ’89 (Miami). After losing 11 straight times to Notre Dame from 1965-80, the Hurricanes won six of eight games from 1981-89.

This year’s team visits the Irish to end a tough October. Miami plays at Georgia Tech on Oct. 1 before home games against Florida State (Oct. 8) and ACC Coastal champ North Carolina (Oct. 15). UM visits Virginia Tech (Oct. 20) on a Thursday before the trip to South Bend.

Notre Dame, which leads the all-time series 16-7-1, visits Miami on Nov. 11, 2017. They are scheduled to play again in 2024-25.

The Irish, who get a bye before hosting Miami, went 10-3 in 2015, losing to Ohio State in the Fiesta Bowl. They finished 11th in the final Associated Press poll.